Jamie McDonnell wants to become a unified world champion - or is ready to move up and mix it with the likes of Scott Quigg and Carl Frampton.

The WBA bantamweight holder is heading out to America for rematch with former WBO boss Tomoki Kameda in September and is hoping it will move him even further up the pecking order.

McDonnell (26-2-1-KO12) won the first fight on a close points decision and is out to knock the Japanese fighter out and then take on any of the other world champions at 122lbs - or move up to super-bantamweight.

"I'm going to beat Kameda and wouldn't mind fighting a [WBA] super champion,” he told Sky Sports.

“But if there are no big fights or big paydays left at bantamweight, I'll just move up to tackle the super-bantamweights.

"I'm big for bantamweight but there's still a couple more fights left in me. I know I need big fights, big names and if I beat Kamada I want to stay fighting in America, under the Al Haymon banner, and hopefully he'll chuck me in with some of his other guys.

"I'd fight any of them. [Guillermo] Rigondeaux and all of them. I'll fight Quigg or Frampton. I thought Frampton would've nicked it between them - but after the last performances I now think Quigg comes out on top now.

"I'd move up and fight any super-bantamweight. I've proved I belong up at world class [level] and it's only four pounds, it's not a massive difference and I'm a big bantam anyway.

"But I want to dominate at bantamweight."

McDonnell feels he should have the WBO to go with his WBA because when he signed the first fight with Kameda in May, it was expected to have both world titles on the line.

But Kameda (31-1-KO19) did not defend it, leaving Thailand's Pungluang Sor Singyu to win the vacant strap and become the new champion.

McDonnell has one of the two WBA belts with Juan Carlos Payano the 'Super' champion, while the WBC belongs to Shinsuke Yamanaka, who makes his ninth defence towards the end of September.

The IBF version now belongs to Randy Caballero, who prised it away from Darlington's Stuey Hall last year and has Bristol's Lee Haskins in place as his number one contender.

"The fight's not an interesting fight - there is if there’s a world title at stake - but its not one that gets me buzzing," he said of Haskins.

"I want to fight big names. I've beaten and I'm fighting Kemada again so I want big names

"I should have the WBO belt, I wouldn't mind the WBC and then I'll have cleared up. But first things first, I just have to get Kameda out of the way and I am sure he's going to give me a tough fight on September 6.

"But I am true world champion and I am going to stay that way."